v. [f. FATAL + -IZE.] a. intr. To incline to fatalism. b. trans. To render subject to fate or inevitable necessity. Hence Fatalized, Fatalizing ppl. adjs.
1834. G. S. Faber, The Primitive Doctrine of Election (1836), p. lii. Melancthon expressly rejected the fatalising Scheme of Calvin. Ibid., 155. The fatalising dogmatism of the Stoics.
1876. J. Martineau, Hours of Thought on Sacred Things (1877), 85. We become what the universe would be without a God, a fatalised organism, in servile bondage to its own lowest forces, transcended and wielded by no Diviner Soul. Ibid. (1888), A Study of Religion, I. II. i. 243. Must we repent of interfusing through it [the non-Ego] a Will like ours, because it is too steadfast and its ways seem fatalised?